Evaluating The Assessment Process in The EFL Teaching Programs An
Evaluating The Assessment Process in The EFL Teaching Programs An
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Certificate English Exams for 1989-1993" (1994). Master's Capstone Projects. 118.
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Evaluating the Assessment Process in the EFL
Teaching Programs and the General Secondary
Education Certificate English Exams For 1989-1993.
By Abdelshafy A. Abbas
I
RECOMMENDATION
This research study was undertaken by Mr. Abdelshafy A Abbas while he was in-
residence at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst during the 1993-94 academic year.
Mr. Abbas was a participant in the Egyptian Peace Fellowship Program. During his stay
Mr. Abbas was unusually productive and used his time wisely.
The study focused on the use of an evaluation process for the English as a Foreign
Language Teaching Program in the secondary schools of Egypt and takes into consider-
ation the General Secondary School Certificate English Examination. The study is well-
organized and carefully researched with references from the leading researchers in the
field of assessment. It is obvious that a great deal of work has gone into the research.
Of special interest is Mr. Abbas's concluding chapter where he offers an alternative
assessment approach.
I recommend that his study be given serious consideration by those professional in the
field who see the need for an alternative approach to assessing students' performance.
Too often educators rely upon the past for guidance. Today's students must be prepared
to participate in a rapidly changing world where governments expect improved perfor-
mance by tomorrow's citizens.
August, 1994
Dedication
II
Acknowledgment
II I
Abstract
The focal point m this paper is the evaluation of the current
assessment process in our EFL teaching program in the general secondary
school certificate education and the general secondary school certificate
English exams (G.S.E.C.E.E.) being the only tool used in this respect. The
purpose of such evaluation is to decide its effectiveness as an integrated
part in the EFL teaching process since effective assessment makes effective
teaching.
IV
criteria found effective for the purpose of the present study were sub-
categorized into: a. Criteria for language assessment in general; and b.
Criteria for language tests in particular. It is important to refer to the point
that the criteria set have been based on the framework presented by L.J.
Harp ( 1991) and others in language assessment. For more effective
criteria, two questionnaires based on these two categorizes of criteria, were
subjected to some ESL/EFL and evaluation professors in the States.
In chapter 5, the conclusions have been made along with the findings
of the study. The portfolio, the alternative assessment approach has been
presented in this chapter. The guidelines for planning a portfolio, its
requirements have been shown in chapter.5. Also, recommendations,
along with the suggested proposals are included m chapter 5. The study
appendices and bibliography have been included at the end of the present
study.
The assessment process needs a reform that can be the key to the
educational reform we are looking forward to.
v
Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Rationale
1 . 1 Introduction ................................................................................................................ 1
1 . 2 Statement of the Problem .................................................................................. 1 0
1 . 3 Significance of the problem .............................................................................. 1 1
1 . 4 Objectives .................................................................................................................. 1 7
1 . 5 Issues in Assessment.. ......................................................................................... 1 8
1 . 6 Assessment Process from a Historical Perspective ................................. 2 7
1. 7 Hypotheses ............................................................................................................... 3 8
1.8 Assumptions ............................................................................................................ 3 8
1. 9 Limitations ............................................................................................................... 3 9
1. 10 Definitions of Terms ............................................................................................. 4 0
VI
Chapter.I
Rationale
1.1. Introduction:
1
competencies. Thus, assessment is essential for the evaluation
process.
2
Assessment process can be the right guide for planning
instructional programs and technique. In pilot studies, conducted
before making any decision, concerning the educational process
components, evaluation studies should be based on different
assessment approaches. Froese (1991) believes that assessment can
serve as an excellent guide for both the planning and the
implementation of various instructional programs and techniques.
Figure 2
( 1)
Objectives
(Competencies & performance)
(2)
Program
(Syllabus & Activities )
(3)
Outcomes
(Skills Acquired)
(4)
Assessment Process
(Formal & Informal tools)
(5)
Evaluation
(6)
Reteaching
3
process. They argue that the assessment process should be part of
the teaching process.
Figure 3
D- Reteaching or Remediation or
Prescription of the second Phase of
the process
Seri ven (1987), Stake (1970) and Bloom (1988) have made a
distinction between two kinds of assessment, according to the
functions it can do for the educational process. Formative
evaluations, that generally, aims at providing comments to shape
and guide an ongoing activity, while the summative evaluation, that
is used mainly for the selection of students to continue for further
study. The product of formative evaluation activities is expected to
be an improved instructional program; while the product of the
4
summative evaluation is normally a set of descriptive statements
about the efficacy of the program.
Assessment process can be, also, the means to help the student
have a sense of accomplishment that can be positively correlated
with his /her achievement. Madsen (1983) states that in the early
1970s students in an intensive ESL program were being taught from
an unstructured conversation-based text and they complained that
while they had ample opportunity to converse in English, they were
not learning anything. Soon afterwards, however, periodic
evaluation provided them with a sense of accomplishment that
ended their dissatisfaction.
5
language teaching program. These positive attitudes, toward the
instructional program, can be helpful in developing his/her EFL skills
or competencies which are the objectives of the program. Students
can have these positive attitudes, if they find that the assessment
process is based on what they are taught in the foreign language
program. Consequently, they will give the instruction the due
interest
6
also help to locate the precise areas of difficulty encountered by the
class or by the individual student. Unless the teacher is able to
identify and analyze the errors, a student makes in using the target
language, he/she will be in no position to render any assistance at all
through appropriate anticipation, remedial work and additional
practice.
7
the ministry offices in charge) should be subjected to evaluation
studies and assessment process
8
students, studying what does not count in exams, is considered a
waste of time.
9
1.2 Statement of the problem:
10
In brief, the present study is an attempt to question the
assessment process, used in our EFL programs and the secondary
education certificate English exam as its solely used tool. The purpose
is to evaluate the effectiveness of the assessment process, and its tool
for accomplishing the functions required in our EFL teaching
program. Also, for more effective assessment process, the
alternative assessment approach and required interventions have
been suggested.
11
learning the factual information that can weigh heavily in the final
exams.
12
I think that a mismatch between the candidates' competencies and
competency levels expected by the universities can be.
13
The present study focuses on the General Secondary Education
Certificate English Exam, in particular, as it has been the only tool
used for the assessment of our students' competence, in English as a
foreign language, for many years now. The G.S.E.C.E. represents the
main and the only component of the assessment process, that can
have great potentials for increasing the effectiveness of our
educational system. Yet, for the other promotion grades, in the
general secondary school, the great part of the evaluation (65%) goes
to the final written test and the rest part, (35%) is devoted to
classroom activities and the teacher-made tests.
14
and the students are to double their efforts for better performance in
the exam. The terrifying sense, usually accompanying G.S.S.C.E.E, is
expected to continue if not to increase. Also, the costs of the special
tuition will be the same, but instead of two years' premiums, it will
be one year.
15
Thus, we can conclude that the change proposed, is not
extensive enough to accomplish the changes expected. It has not
suggested new interventions, either in the test methods or the
formats. Also, no change has been made in the test development
process, i.e., its construction, its operation and so on. It rests the
same view to the secondary school education certificate English
exam, as a top secret that should be planned in a closed office
without subjecting it to the different stages of the test development.
16
process. The purpose is deciding its effectiveness, in this respect,
and suggesting the interventions for making it more effective. It is
important to note that, the purpose, of this study, is not to exclude
the G .S.E.C.E. from the assessment process or to negate its function as
an assessment tool, but to place it properly along that process.
17
3-Suggesting possible interventions for the secondary education
certificate English exam in both the test formats and skills being
measured.
a. Aptitude tests:
18
Aptitude language tests in English as a foreign language, can
measure the student' s probable performance in EFL teaching
program, based on the indication of the student' s special aptitude.
Heaton (1975) points out that aptitude tests try to find out whether
the student will experience difficulty in identifying the sounds of
the new language or its grammatical structures? Thus, these tests
look toward expected future performance rather than looking at the
past achievement in a certain teaching program.
b. Proficiency Tests::
19
probably unknown though they may bear on the success in some
future activity. Brown (1984) states that the proficiency tests'
measure the testees general ability in English or their readiness for a
particular program as indicated by a placement exam.
c. Achievement Tests:
20
taught a certain language program, i.e., use or knowledge presented
in an entire language text or course.
21
d. Diagnostic Tests:
22
efficacy of the program. Stake (1970) states that evaluation should
be viewed primarily as providing diagnostic data to be used as a
guide to improvement and to indicate a state of progress toward a
goal. In short the formative model is the appropriate one for
evaluation efforts.
23
g. Objective tests & Subjective Tests:
24
choose the right option of the multiple choice given, and in other
cases, they are productive as the testee has to supply or provide the
option required for responding to the test traits. According to
Broughton et al (1987), in the knowledge test, the emphasis is on the
language sub-skills (i.e., grammar, vocabulary and phonology), using
the discrete point approach.
Thus, we can conclude that any language test can be put into
one of the above mentioned categories on three bases: a. What is it
set for?, b. What formats are used in the language test?, and what
skills or sub-skills it evaluates or measures. Yet, because of the
correlation between the different language variables, a test that can
be used, basically for one purpose and secondary for another. Thus,
the achievement test can be basically an indicator of the student' s
achievement in the EFL program, yet, it can be used as indicator of
the student' s language performance and attitudes because of the
correlation between these learning variables.
25
can be norm-referenced test. But if the purpose is finding out how
much the student has achieved from the syllabus taught, a test, will
be in this case a criterion- test. Heaton ( 1976) thinks that many
progress, achievement and proficiency tests can be used as diagnostic
tests to some degree enabling the teacher to identify specific areas of
weakness and difficulty so that he is able to plan the most
appropriate remedial program
26
measures the testee' s reading and listening skills, and it can be also
classified as knowledge test because it measures the testee' s
language knowledge, in both grammar and vocabulary. Moreover,
because the interest in the G .S.E.C.E.E is comparing the students'
performance to each other or a certain norm rather than finding out
how much they have gained from the EFL program, these exams can
be categorized as norm-referenced tests.
27
The EFL assessment process, in the world can be tracked along
the following different stages, each of which is based on its own set
of assumptions about language teaching and testing:
During the last century and into the early decades of our
present century, language testing was intuitive and subjective in its
nature. It depended on the personal estimation of the teacher. Weir
(1987) points out that the setting of the testing of that time was an
artificial one and the testing operation occurred in certain places (i.e.
the classroom). The involvement of the testees, in authentic
situations, was no part of evaluation criteria of the language testing,
then
28
language, and reading the written texts. Accordingly, a great part of
language testing, was devoted to measuring the students' mastering
of the grammatical forms.
During that time, both the teaching process and the assessment
process were teacher centered. Weir (1987) mentions that there was
no role given to the learner, except that of receiving the knowledge
from the teacher. The transmission of knowledge from the teacher to
the student, was the basis of the language learning. Both in the
teaching process and the assessment process concerned little faith in
the students' ability to be active learners.
29
THe function of the language tests, at that time, was limited to
sorting out the students for administrative purposes(i.e.. for selecting
them for further study). Testing has, traditionally, provided a
measure of the student's achievement for evaluating the testee's
success. Brown (1984) states, that the emphasis, in the past, was on
summative assessment as the purpose was to sort out testees, so that
they can be, easily classified and promoted to further study or
training
Yet, this era has been criticized for the lack of the quantitative
terms used and the over reliance on the subjective judgment of the
teacher. Also this era have been criticized for the disintegration
between the teaching process and the assessment process The
assessment process used to be administered at the end of the
teaching process for awarding the students the grades.
30
into units or words and so on. The elements of the language,
accordingly, could be broken into discrete elements that could be
taught and tested separately with little or no attention to how these
elements worked together, in a communicative situation.
3I
options given, were increased to four, i.e., one right option and three
dis tracters.
Yet, language tests at that time have not been praised for their
improper validity, particularly the construct validity of a test. Weir
(1987) argues that, the clear advantages of the discrete linguistic
points are that they yield data that are easily quantifiable as well as
allowing a wide coverage of items, but they suffer from the defects
of the construct, they seek to measure.
They are also blamed for breaking the language into discrete
and isolated items. Oller (1983) points out, that the discrete-point
analysis used, in the tests of this category, breaks the elements of the
language apart and tries to teach them separately with little or no
attention to the way those elements interact in a larger context of
communication.
Basing the tests of this era on the assumption that the student'
s competence in grammar or vocabulary can be an indicator of
32
his/her language communicative competence is one of the POs
against them. Savignon (1985) claims that, grammatical competence
itself was not a good predictor of communicative skills. He suggests
measuring the testee's communicative skills, instead, i.e. his ability to
negotiate in the target language. He argues that the communication
process implies more than the recognition and the production of the
discrete items of grammar or vocabulary tests.
Tests of that era have been adverse for denying the role of the
whole context in getting the meaning of the words included. Isolating
the word out of its context makes it meaningless. Kelly (1987) argues
that if the goal of the applied analysis of meaning, is the recognition
of the context specific meaning, of an utterance, as distinct from its
system-giving meaning, then applied linguistics should be more
interested rn the development and measurement of the ability, to
take part in specified communicative performance.
The meaning of the whole text has been argued to more than
the accumulation of its bits or discrete parts. .Morrow (1986) has
pointed out that assessing the learner's proficiency, i.e. the potential
success, in the use of the language in some general terms, should
focus on the test of a knowledge of the learner and his ability to
apply the rules and processes, by which these discrete elements are
synthesized into infinite grammatical sentences that can be
33
appropriate for a particular context. He stresses the point that, the
aim should not be the knowledge of the elements alone.
Thus, though language tests of this era have been praised for
the high value of reliability, efficiency and objectivity , they have
been criticized for acting against the wholeness or the integration of
the language elements. They have also been criticized from
communicative and functional perspectives. Kelly (1986) points out
that some testees might manage to succeed in the indirect tests by
receiving training of a certain kind and thus the test will be
invalidated. He further adds the point, that in some cases, indirect
tests are subject to attacks on their validity, especially where it is
possible to bypass the ability in question and develop proficiency, in
the assessment task alone.
34
contrary to, the allegedly atomistic assumptions of the 'discrete -
point tests'. Integrative tests are, claimed, to be more effective as
they are based on the assumption of the integration of the whole
language skills and sub-skills. In addition, they are said to measure
the ability to integrate the separate language skills, in ways that
more closely approximate the actual process of language use.
35
Language is seen, as an aggregate of 'skills' of various kinds,
then assessment is likely, to be in terms of a classification of skills.
Broughton et al. (1987) states that if language is seen as a kind of
code , a means by which ideas may be expressed as easily by one set
of symbols as by another, then grammar will be seen as the code
books by means of which the cipher may be broken. Knowing a
language will be seen as the ability to operate the code, so
assessment will be in terms of knowledge of the rules (i.e.,
grammar) and, the facility in transferring from one set of symbols to
another (i.e., translation).
36
Language tests should indicate, how well a person can function
rn his second language Madsen (1983) has pointed out, that tests
today are mainly concerned with evaluating real communication, in
the second language. He argues that, the best exams are those, that
combine various sub skills, as we do when exchanging ideas orally or
in written ..
Yet, the communicative tests era have new trends that have
shifted the emphasis from the linguistic dimension to the
communicative dimension. The emphasis is no longer on linguistic
accuracy, but on the ability to function effectively through language
in particular context of situation. The testee' s fluency in using the
language should be emphasized over his accuracy. Cooper ( 1980)
views that the existing communicative tests might fail to assess a
person's communicative ability if test frameworks concentrated on
linguistic competence.
37
understood in that language with the context and the constraints of
particular language-using circumstances.
38
-Effective evaluation relies on the related data yielded from different
multiple sources of assessment in the EFL programs.
39
1.10 Terms Definitions:
For the purpose, of the present study, these terms have been
defined as follows:
-Test
Yet, in the present study, tests are used to refer to either what
is usually a short, quick teacher-devised activity carried out in the
classroom and used by the teacher as the basis of on-going activity.
Achievement test
Proficiency test
40
language co uses he/she has studied. Yet, according to Richards et al
(1993), a proficiency test is different from an achievement one in
that the former is not linked or based on the content of a certain
syllabus taught. A proficiency test can, also, be administered before
or after the teaching program.
-Exam:
-Assessment:
-Evaluation:
4I
Tasks
-Class Participation
- Homework
Comprehensible Input
42
competence as the experience is added to his/her comprehensible
input. Thus, the comprehensible input is claimed to have its positive
impact on student' s language performance that represent student' s
OU tpu t.
Authenticity
-Summative evaluation
- Formative evaluation
Equitability
43
Formal assessment
Informal Assessment:
44
Chapter.2
Review of Literature
45
2-The New Trends In The Assessment Process.
3-The Portfolio Assessment Approach
46
Woodford (1982) refers to the fact, that foreign language
testing, in schools has followed the general trends of foreign language
education, from teaching and testing grammar, to the audio lingual
approach of the 1960s and the developments since that time. The
study suggests, that assessment measures need to be
tailored to realistic objectives, not to the nearly impossible goal of
mastery of four language skills, in the foreign language course. The
need, for valid and practical measurement tools, is stressed
47
In 1983, Snyder states that foreign language tests should be
creative, so as to help the students to use the language creatively.
They should also be communicative so as to allow for both
meaningful language usage and meaningful contexts. To achieve
these two purposes of creativity and communication, they should
include formats, such as multiple-choice formats, true-false ones and
essay tests. They should also include oral interviews and cloze
procedures
48
Lyons (1984) cautions, that criterion referenced tests are no
more effective at diagnosing comprehension sub-skills, than are
traditional instruments. They may also be incredible to the sub-skill
approach to comprehension. He stresses, that the assessment process
should be more related to the classroom teaching activities.
49
written to highlight comparisons among concepts presented rn the
passage.
50
multiple choice method is compared with a subjective, essay method.
The multiple choice test is found, to be a reliable and valid method of
testing writing proficiency, yet there is a correlation between the
objective and subjective techniques used, indicating that both
approaches tap similar skills.
51
testing techniques are being used, and which appear to be the most
fruitful, in terms of what they say about the candidates. The main
criterion for evaluating the effectiveness of any language test should
be how much it indicates what the learner has/not learnt.
52
items. More qualitative measures are needed to assess, how well
particular words are known. Usually word knowledge has been
measured in two ways, as a set of components or aspects, and as an
ordered series of levels of stages. Interview techniques are
suggested, for use with the second language learners.
53
Long (1987) suggests classroom activities for improving
listening comprehension skills and measuring them in beginning and
intermediate students. The study suggests, the use of a passage of
connected discourse from the native speaker of the language, as a
model for realistic monologue. Classroom activities, are also argued,
to be included in the teaching and assessing the listening
comprehension skills.
54
and to help teachers define appropriate learning objectives and
evaluate learning.
55
and measurements objectives, in the State programs and the State
Standards. The study suggests a number of recommendations,
proposed for changes in the educational assessment there. It also
recommends expanding tests into more additional subjects, than
those traditionally included It is argued that the interest should be
rn encouraging the students' performance.
56
Rautzel (1990) compares 2 whole language classrooms and 2
basal classrooms on the Gates-MacGinitie Reading Tests at the end of
l st grade. A significance difference was found between the 2
approaches, with the whole language approach being favored over
the basal reader approach on total reading scores as well as on the
vocabulary and comprehension scores. It is concluded that whole
language strategies and routines used will yield scores on traditional
reading standardized achievement tests that are comparable or
superior to those resulting from the use of basal reader programs.
57
the assessment process. Informal techniques are recommend as they
can yield more valid data about the students' achievement.
58
problems. The study concludes that, assessment systems develop
students' intellectual, social, and emotional abilities. The two models
require a change in purpose and attitude throughout the educational
system
59
addressed when constructing a test of listening comprehension
proficiency in a 2nd language. The model specifies the person,
competence, text, and item domains and components of assessment.
Specific aspects of the model include the text/task/difficulty
dimension, cognitive operations, response category, item type,
leveling variables.
60
comprehension tasks in English and the native language of the
students were constructed after 3 assessment methods (multiple-
choice and open-ended questions, and rational deletion cloze) were
constructed. Ss perform better on multiple-choice than on open-
ended and cloze test items.
61
possible. Both the formal and the informal tools should be integrated
rn the assessment process.
62
classrooms included in the study (e.g., red dots next to the problems
needing attention, paired learning and student answer keys).
63
Barr (1993) suggests, classroom diagnosis should be integral
part of instruction. He argues, that diagnoses should be based on
natural language evidence gathered in, real learning situations. He
adds, that the effective diagnoses should be, also based on using the
needs of the students, in performing academic tasks, as a standard.
64
2.3 The Literature Related To The Portfolio Assessment
65
portfolio system. The study develops an explanation and a defense
of portfolio assessment as a feasible means of assessment in writing
classes.
66
Habba (1993) suggests, the use of the portfolio, as an excellent
means for communication with both the students and their parents.
By viewing their children's progress over time, parents can see how
well he/she is applying new concepts and strategies. Using portfolios,
in a whole language classroom, lets parents see their children's
performance in meaningful activities, such as letter or story writing ,
problem solving and the projects, in which the information, gained
through his/her reading, can be used.
Hunter (1993) points out, that the portfolio design and use can
help much in the process of preparing the students for the
information age. The portfolio can have the integrated disciplines,
that can be based on the classroom structure. Portfolio assessment is
described as a promising development in language assessment.
67
assessment can enhance the efficiency of ESL instruction while
addressing the accountability of language assessment.
68
agents of the change required. Yet, portfolios need to be approached
cautiously. Using the portfolio in the teaching learning process
requires great efforts for both the teacher and the student but it can
help much if well organized, in the teaching process.
b. All the student' s language skills; oral and written are taken into
consideration while measuring his/her language competence.
69
c. The literature related to the assessment process recommends new
test formats, and more assessment tools.
70
Chapter.3
The Study Methodology
3.1 Methodology:
For the purpose of the present study, i.e., evaluating the overall
assessment process in our EFL teaching programs, and the secondary
school education certificate English exams, and in order to suggest
alternatives to the current assessment process, the present study has been
developed and organized in the following procedures:
71
Also, the last five years Secondary Education Certificate English
Exams have been subjected to a process of language analysis to expose the
lexical and the grammatical points, covered in them. The analysis has
included the exams' skills (i.e., reading and writing), and sub-skills (i.e.,
structure and vocabulary), measured. (See Appendices tables no.25 to 29,
PP, 240 to 248)
Then, the criteria have been classified into two categories according
to the function they are set for. The first category includes thirteen criteria
that can be used for evaluating the overall assessment process, while the
second one includes four criteria that can be used for evaluating the
G.S.E.C.E exams. For verifying the two groups of criteria to make sure that
they can be effective properly for the evaluation purposes in the present
study, they have been arranged in two questionnaires (See Appendices pp;
224 to 227).
72
The two questionnaires were distributed to some ESL and EFL
professors, in the United States, where the researcher had some classes at
University of Massachusetts, for 12 months. Also, for more effectiveness,
some assessment and evaluation professors were included in the
questionnaires' processes. The selection of the professors, in ESL and
evaluation departments, for the questionnaire's process, has been based
on the overlap between teaching and assessing the students' competencies
in English as a foreign language. The professors, in both EFL teaching and
assessment, have enriched the present study, in the evaluation process.
Adding any of the criteria' s item, to the set model, has been based
on the strength of its value, computed statistically, in the questionnaires'
processes. The criterion, that has had 5. Point or more, has been included
and the one with less than 5. Points, has been excluded. Actually, the
strength of each item, in the criteria has been calculated on the basis of the
value of its percentage calculated in the responses of the professors and
teachers subjected. The following formula has been used:
The criteria's items, found effective, have been classified into the
following categories:
a. EFL assessment general criteria
b. Language tests criteria
73
a.. EFL assessment general criteria:
74
much it accounts for the assessment process. Thus, it will also lead the
students to take the EFL teaching process seriously from the beginning of
the program, instead of passive waiting that occurs up until at the end of
the program taught.
On the other hand, this link between the teaching process and the
assessment process, makes the assessment process unambiguous,
interpretable and understandable to all those involved in the teaching
process. The student' s learning problems can be well diagnosed and the
real causes of problem areas can be highlighted. Also, it will be easy for
the teacher and the student to find out what is wrong with the teaching
process. Thus, the syllabus or any teaching variable can be subjected to an
ongoing evaluation process and new interventions can be suggested for
more effective EFL teaching.
According to Harp (1991, p.58), testing is just one of the tools of the
assessment and evaluation process. As assessment and evaluation
instruments are varied, literacy is assessed in a variety of context. The EFL
assessment process should not be limited to a single assessment tool or
context.
75
"In addition to the appropriate tests, whole language teachers
use samples of the student's work whether it is reading or
writing or speaking and they observe and record ways in
which children interact with the teaching stimulus." (Harp,
1991, p.58)
Moreover, the use of only one tool in the assessment process may
lead to pedagogical malpractices. Students, for example, will devalue the
other activities, as they do not account for his or her evaluation. Thus, the
student will find that his or her involvement, in the other activities is
inconsequential and unnecessary. Thus, teacher' s complain of the learners'
passive behavior is expected to continue.
76
not negate the role they can function in the assessment process. These
tools are listed below:
77
2-Classroom attendance:
EFL classroom is expected to be the place where the student can find
the language discourse where the student can find the speech event and
take the speech turn. It is only place available in English non speaking
countries, where the student can use the language as a means of
communication. It gives the student the opportunity to practice the
language functions in a meaningful way. That is why student' s
attendance, in the class, can correlates positively to his EFL learning
process.
Yet, attending the EFL class is not an end in itself but it is rather a
means to another end. Attendance should be viewed as a means for
involving students in the classroom activities. In some cases, EFL students
come to the class but they are distant and do not from take part in the
interaction process in the class. Thus, their attendance is not positive. For
effective attendance, students should be involved in all the classroom
activities. It is the teacher' s role to help student be involved in the
teaching activities.
78
out. Student' s late arrival in class should not be overlooked and there can
be some regulations here as well.
79
teacher, should monitor the student' s performance and try to find out the
student' s patterns of mistake. Consequently, remedial drills should be
suggested for the student to do, to help him/her overcome the points of
difficulties encountered.
4.Student' s tasks
A task is a kind of activity student can do outside the class and latter
on he/she can be asked to give his/her colleagues an idea about it in the
EFL class .. These tasks can give student the opportunity to practice their
language competence in a functional and communicative way. Any
activity included in the EFL class is assumed to develop his/her language
80
competence. According to Krashen (1985) any language activity in the
ESL/EFL class is just part of the student' s comprehensible input that is
expected to have its impact on student' s language competence.
The EFL teacher should follow the student' s journal or log and
provide him or her with the right sort of feedback. Thus, it can be used a
way of establishing a dialogue between the teacher and the student
(through comments, questions and reactions), they are sometimes referred
to as dialogue journals or diaries. Consequently, it can be used as a
teaching technique for developing the student' s language competence.
There are many activities or tasks for the student to use as his or her
journal. The student can be asked to read a short story, from the school
library and write a one page summary to read to his colleagues in the
class. He/she can also, be asked to listen to an English TV or radio program
and tell the class what he or she has got from that program. He/she can
write some essays, that can be read and evaluated by the teacher or some
students in the class.
8I
information about his/her country, education, hobbies, impressions about
our country and so on. Also, student may be asked to provide the tourist
with some information about directions or about our history.
The teacher can, also, ask the student, to interview one of the school
characters, or the school visitors who can speak English well. The student
can ask them some simple questions about their education, hobbies,
impressions and so on. Also, a student can be asked to interview another
student, whether from the same class or from another class and exchange
ideas with him. They can talk about their hobbies, future plans, academic
achievement and so on.
c-penpal
83
The teacher can, also, ask the student to read some samples of the
letters sent or received to the class. Both the teacher and the students,
listening to letter reader, are asked to provide the student with the right
feedback. While reading a sample of the letter, the student wrote or
received, the student has the chance to develop his or her communicative
skills orally or in writing. As the student is reading his samples to the
class, some students may ask him or her for clarification. Thus, he or she
will be involved in a negotiation process.
The classroom wall magazine can be, also, a good teaching technique
as well as an assessment tool. The EFL class, should be encouraged to have
a simple form of classroom magazines. It can be a very teaching
technique for developing the student' s writing skills and communicative
skills. Every student, in the class, should be given the chance to write
something or to tell the class about his/her reaction to what has been
published.
84
Thus, all the above mentioned tasks can be effective teaching
techniques for developing the student' s communicative competencies.
Moreover, they can be used as assessment tools that can indicate what the
student has/not achieved. The EFL teacher is assumed to have his/her
observation sheet checklist all the time to write in a coding brief way
his/her evaluation of the student' s language competencies in addition to
his/her learning problems in the language components i.e., phonology,
morphology and syntax.
5. Student' s Classwork:
While students are busy doing these exercises, EFL teacher can
observe them well and give each one individually the feedback required
for effective language acquisition. EFL teacher should use his/her
observation sheet and checklist to write down his/her comments on what
student has/not achieved. The EFL teacher can use student' s performance
rn theses exercises as scaffolding in the EFL program.
After students finish doing these exercises, they hand them to their
teacher to evaluate their performance. The concern of EFL teacher should
be pointing out to the student what he/she has/not achieved. Grading
should not be the main case as it is useless in second language acquisition
85
according Harp (1991). The EFL teacher should suggest what student can
do to overcome his/her point of weakness and reinforce his/her strengths.
EFL teacher should use students' performance in these exercises for
evaluating every variable in the EFL teaching process to suggest the
intervention required.
6-Teacher-made Tests
Teacher-made tests are different from final exams. They are more
practical; as they are supposed to be short enough so as not to interrupt
the EFL teaching process. Also, they do not cost much as the final exams.
Moreover, they can be used more for formative purposes than for
summative ones. They can be used for evaluating the student' s language
competence in the oral or the written act. Also, it is the class teacher who
designs these tests rather than the people in charge in the ministry offices
who can be isolated from the real teaching process.
Yet, these tests may be criticized for lack of objectivity as they will
vary from one school or class to another according to the teacher' s
education and understanding. Consequently, their appropriateness and
effectiveness can be questioned. Moreover, because of the misbehaviors of
some EFL teachers, for one reason or another, people may not have faith in
such tests.
86
7-National Exams
The importance of these exams lies in the fact that they can be an
indicator of the effectiveness of the national EFL programs, in terms of
creating the common values and standards for ensuring the national unity
of our country. Thus, educational system, in general is important for
ensuring the national security of the nation that necessitates all the
candidates to have some common values and skills. Also, the national
security requires that the graduates of these teaching programs to have
the language competencies that enable them to do well in the higher
education and participate in the development process of our country.
Consequently, we need national exams to make sure that our educational
system is effective enough for achieving such purposes,
These exams are, also, praised for their objectivity. They represent a
fair basis for evaluating all the candidates' language competencies because
of the use of one set of test traits and formats in the evaluation process.
They represent equal opportunities for all the candidates to show their
language performances for the evaluation purposes. However, these exams
are criticized for their high costs in their operation and administration.
They also require special security procedures in both their administration
and the scoring of student' s answer sheets.
87
Principle Three: Assessment process should be continuous:
88
setting. So if the student has urgent or casual conditions or cases, he or
she can find other testing opportunities to show his/her performance best.
89
5-is an advocate for students rather than being an adversary. The teacher
sits beside the child focusing on process treating the child and the work
with the greatest respect;
90
learning gains through testing. Of course, documenting the student, s
learning gains is important but it is not necessarily to rely solely on tests.
Teacher' s intuition can be as accountable and valid as tests.
91
teaching process. The teacher' s observation, according to Harp (1991 ), is
at the center of the assessment and evaluation process in EFL programs.
92
primary importance, teaching to the test is counter productive. The time
spent, on test-like activities robs time from the much more important
expenences of real reading and writing.
93
Weir (1987 ,) argues that it was thought that if the student was
tested in phoneme discrimination, stress and intonation, the sum of the
discrete or sub tests would be equivalent to his/her proficiency in listening
comprehension. The listening comprehension skill is looked upon, in this
case, as an accumulation of the discrete points.
a- Dictation:
Weir (1987) states that there is much evidence that shows dictation
correlating highly with a great variety of other tests, particularly with
other integrative general language proficiency tests. Also, Oller (1983)
points out that research shows that dictation test results are powerful
predictors of language ability, as measured by other kinds of language
tests.
94
process language in a real life context. They think the dictation approach
in assessing the student' s listening comprehension is more effective and
authentic than the other assessment approaches or formats.
95
her feelings, or representative m that the speaker describes some states or
events.
Yet, the student' s articulation of the sounds, the right usage of the
stress and intonation can be the determiner of the function of the message
conveyed by the student. In the graphic form of the message, punctuation
marks can be the determinants of the meaning, but in the speaking test,
the stress and the intonation becomes the determinants in this respect.
1- Mini-dialogues:
2- Dialogues:
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dialogue format, is controlled by the instructions that he or she must act
on. In addition, because of the larger context and content Also, because of
the longer context of the dialogue, the student has a greater chance to
understand the message conveyed.
Yet, the general objective of the reading skill test, is to evaluate the
student' s skill in comprehending the message read, whether it is a
sentence or a passage. Evaluating the student' reading comprehension skill
requires an integrative and communicative approach. However, the
student' s performance on the reading comprehension assessment can be
the outcome of many factors such as his or her comprehension of the
language sub-skills, i.e., vocabulary and grammar; his/her prior
knowledge, and discrimination skill. All these variables are assumed to
correlate positively to his or her reading comprehension
97
3.b Reading Comprehension Formats:
98
Multiple-choice tests, also, take much longer and are more expensive
and difficult to prepare than open-ended ones. Each item has to be
rigorously edited to ensure that:
c- Cloze Passages:
In the cloze procedure, words are deleted from a text after, allowing
a few full sentences of introduction. The deletion rate can be done
automatically, usually, between every 5th and 11th word. Candidates have
to fill each gap by supplying the word, they think has been deleted.
99
4. a Testing Writing:
Yet, evaluating the final product of the student' s wntmg should not
be the case in EFL teaching programs. According to Harp (1991) grading
the student' s writing is of no use in developing his or her writing skill. The
teacher' s feedback is assumed to help the student develop his or her
writing skill. For developing the student' s writing skill and evaluating it
properly the interest should be in the writing process rather than in the
student' s final writing work.
100
has to write the main points of a text including the essential ideas of a
piece of writing and omitting non-essentials.
5- Sub-skills Measuring:
a- Phonology:
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b- Vocabulary:
c- Grammar:
Even though the test formats, that can be used in this respect are
varied, the transformational approach is quite common. With this format
the student may be asked to restate the sentence given changing it into the
passive or active or carrying out whatever instructions have been given in
this respect. The correction format in which the student is asked to correct
a certain verb according to the tense of the sentence can, also, be used.
Cloze passages and multiple choice formats can be used in assessing the
student' s competence in grammar.
103
Thus, we can conclude that for measuring the student' s language
skills or sub-skills, both the objective and the subjective approaches can be
used. However the subjective formats, according to Heaton (1975), are
more effective for testing communicative skills than the objective tests. On
the other hand, the objective formats may be more effective for
measuring the student' s competence in the language sub-skills.
The initial part of each multiple choice item is known as the stem.
The choice from which the student selects his answers are known as
options/responses/alternatives. One option is the answer, that it is the
correct option or the key, while the other options are distracters. The task
of the distracter is to distract the majority of the poor students (i.e. those
who do not know the answer) away from the correct options. The
following general principles, regarding the construction of the stem and the
options should be observed when multiple choice items are constructed:
2- Only one feature should be tested at a time. It is less confusing for the
testee and it helps to reinforce a particular teaching point.
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6- Items are generally arranged in roughly in the order of increasing
difficulty.
8- The correct or the best option should be clear and it should be checked
by another person. It should, also, be of the same length as the distractors
10- The alternatives should be so prepared that the right answer can not
be selected except through an actual understanding of the problem
contained in the lead (Lado, 1964 ).
1-The primary purpose of the stem is to present the problem clearly and
concisely.
2-The testee should be able to obtain a very general idea of the problem
and the answer required from the stem.
3- The context of the lead must be clear enough to render the meaning
being tested unambiguous but it should not be so direct that the answer
become obvious without cruise to the lexical unit being tested (Heaton,
1975).
105
Yet, this type of format is criticized, according to Heaton (1975) for
the very fact that it is simpler to answer than the subjective format. Also,
another criticism is that, this type of test formats for encouraging the
student' s guessing. And finally, this format is criticized because there is
no way to test student' s communicative language competence in a direct
way.
106
If we are to choose between the oral aspect and the written aspect of
the language communication, the oral might be preferred since language is
mainly an oral activity and language communication is not limited to the
written aspect or the literacy skills. Listening and speaking represent the
components of the oral aspect of the communication process while, reading
and writing represent the literacy or the written aspect of the that process.
107
should give the opportunity to the testee to express his or her ideas m an
inpredicted way.
- Appropriate sized input:: The size and the scope of the activities
should be such that they are processing the kind of input, they would
normally be expected to.
- Interaction::
Unpredictable language
108
- Authentic Tasks:
109
taxonomy and breaking down into skills, into discrete points to integration
and building up into wholes.
1 10
communicative situations. Children can respond in a variety of ways to
whole texts, and not be limited to fill in the blank activities following the
reading of a short, excerpted piece.
111
comprehension is the outcome of the interaction among these three texts:
I-the text in the head of the author, 2-the head on the printed page, and
3-the text created in the head of the reader, as a result of this interactive
process. Harp claims,
The EFL assessment process must reflect the interaction between the
variables, included in the reading process. The Wisconsin Reading
Association ( 1990), in a publication entitled "Toward an Ecological
Assessment of Reading Process" suggests that assessment and evaluation
in reading must consider the following factors which influence
comprehension:
a. Prior knowledge:
b. Text Structure:
1 12
Language teachers need to determine that texts, used in tests, have an
identifiable structure.
c. Reading Strategies:
The degree of interest in a topic and the attitude, the reader has
towards the reading task, will influence comprehension. Our understanding
of a reader' s comprehension ability will be enlightened by knowing the
interest and attitude the reader brings to the task. Valencia and O' Pearson
(1987) suggest these innovative formats for evaluating reading:
Question Selection: : The teacher can form 20 questions and the students
are asked to select the best ten ones.
1 13
New Views of the reading process :
According to Harp (1991) the new views to the reading process can
tell us that:
.-The ability to synthesize information from various parts of the text and
different texts, is the hallmark of an expert reader.
-Learning from text involves the restructuring application, and flexible use
of knowledge in new situations.
1 14
Yet, in the effective language assessment, the focal point of
assessment and evaluation in, writing, should be the child's growth m
using the writing process. Children must be given feedback on and be
asked to self-evaluate their performance at each stage of the process.
When he/she is given the right feedback, the student can improve his/her
writing work that can be sampled for the assessment and the evaluation
purpose. The final product of the student' s writing skill should not be the
goal of the EFL assessment.
The EFL assessment process should reflect what we know about the
writing process in all its different stages. If assessment and evaluation are
to be consistent with what we know about the writing process, teachers
and students should take critical looks at the following stages of the
writing process:
-The draft writing stage: Students examine the rough draft writing
stage, where the work may be tentative, exploratory, and idea focused,
rather than mechanics focused.
-The editing stage: The student would be evaluated for his or her
ability to engage in self-editing, peer-editing, adults editing and to focus on
the mechanics of writing.
I 15
that can include samples of the student' s work or performance in many
assessment tasks. Over time and in the context of numerous performances,
we can observe patterns of success and failure and the reasons behind
them.
Archbald (1988,) points out that the definition of the tasks included
rn the assessment process, as well as the student' s performance, can be
the indicator of the authenticity of the test. He argues
1I 9
answers on cue; it involves thoughtful understanding as well. And
thoughtful understanding implies being able to do something effective,
transformative or novel with a problem or complex situation.
120
Another destructive influence, of norm-referenced testing, is the
appearance of scientific credibility. Teachers have been led to believe
that grade scores and percentile rankings are scientific, and therefore more
valid, than their professional judgment. So the activities in which children
engage in, in the name of reading instruction look much more like the tests
(fill in the blanks, choose the right answer and so forth), than like
authentic reading activities.
The focus, laid on the EFL tests, whether they are standardized tests
or national or teacher made tests, in the assessment process, is due to the
fact that they are the most commonly used in this respect. Yet, the role of
each of those tests, in the assessment process, varies from one country to
another. In the United States of America, for example, the interest has
been on the standardized tests, while in the United Kingdom, the interest is
12 I
in the national tests. However, the commonsense practice in most
countries, is that they can not be solely used in the assessment process.
122
factors and the availability in which to sit the examination, in addition to
the financial cost of the test, all have to be taken into consideration.
Broughton (1987) states that a good test is practical. This means the
extent to which the test is readily usable by teachers with limited time and
resources. Tests that are less sophisticated in their operation,
administration and scoring are preferred to the more sophisticated ones.
Items Analysis:
To prepare for an item analysis, first score all the tests and arrange
them in order from the highest score to the lowest one. Next, we have to
divide the testees' papers into three groups; those with the highest scores
in one sack, and the lowest in another. (The classical procedure is to choose
the top 27 percent and the bottom 27 percent of the papers for the
analysis). The middle group can be put aside for a while. Then, we record
the student responses, a group of 35 students for example can be divided
as follows:
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Options High Group Low Group
A 1 2
B 5 3
c 2 2
D 1 2
E 1 1
All items should be examined from the point of view of (1) their
difficulty level and (2) their level of discrimination.
To Broughton (1978) tests that are on the whole too easy or too
difficult for the pupils, who do them, do not discriminate well. They do not
spread the pupils out, since virtually all pupils score high marks or all
pupils score low marks. Ideally, the test should give a distribution, which
comes close to that of the normal distribution curve.
a- Arrange the scripts in rank order of total score and divide into two
groups of equal size(i.e., the top half and the bottom half).
124
b- Count the number of those candidates in the upper group answering the
first item correctly; then count the number of lower-group candidates
answering the item correctly.
c- Subtract the number of the correct answers in the lower group from the
number of correct answers in the upper group.
D Correct U - Correct L
n
b- Difficulty level:
The index of difficulty (or the facility value) of an item simply shows
how easy or difficult the particular item proved in the test. The index of
difficulty (F. V) is generally expressed as the fraction or percentage of the
students who answered the item correctly.
We can use this formula:
R represents the number of the correct answers and N the number of all
the students taking the test.
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The average facility value of .5 or 50% may be desirable for many
public achievement tests. Generally, a test question is considered too easy
if more than 90% get it right. An item is considered too difficult, if fewer
than 30& get it right. For the language test to be efficient as an
assessment tool, some difficult items should be included so that the good
students can be motivated to do well in the test. Yet, the inclusion of very
easy items will encourage and motivate the poor student.
126
from the content of the syllabus, taught in the EFL program, rather than
comparing the student to the standards set previously.
- A satisfactory specification has been drawn up, along with test items
with appropriate accompanying texts (The questions of specificity and
authenticity of texts should have been resolved in the design stage).
- The pilot test should undergo a further validation check at this stage by
inviting professionals, in the field to comment on the suitability of the
texts, formats and items.
-The test then needs to be trailed and great care should be exercised to
ensure that the sample of the candidates, in the trial is adequate for the
degree of precision required and is as representative of the target
population, as it is feasible.
- Opinions, also need to be elicited from test takers, lay advisors and
processionals with regard to content.
127
- The test then, also needs to be revised in the light of the qualitative and
quantitative data, generated concerning its reliability, validity and
efficiency.
- If the new test represents a radical departure from previous tests types,
sample tests could be made available to enable candidates to familiarize
themselves in advance with the test procedures.
- The impact of the new test, on the general public, should also be
monitored, as well as the reception of the test by receiving institutions,
that are to make use of the information contained in the test results.
-The scoreability of the test is also, put into consideration in deciding the
test practicality. Can the test be scored with ease so that the users may be
able to handle it?
- The cost and the time can be another dimension when considering how
practical a test is. The practical criterion is: Does the test measure what
we want to test in a reasonable time considering the testing situation? If
so, the test is practical and economical
128
Principle Three: The language test should have the proper
validity:
Test validity means that the test can measure what it is supposed to
measure. It is the degree to which a test measure what it is designed to
measure. Weir (1987) states that the test validity means that the test can
measure what it is intended to measure. To Madsen (1983) a valid test is
one that in fact measures what it claims to be measuring. Brown (1984)
argues that if a test actually measures what it claims to measure, we say it
is valid. To Heaton (1975) the validity of a test is the extent to which it
measures what it is supposed to measure and nothing else. Thus, test
validity refers to its ability to measure what is supposed to measure.
Thus, The test validity means that the test measures actually what it
has been designed to measure. A test of translation, for example, may be
valid as a test of translation but not valid as a test of auditory
comprehension, and vice versa. The validity of a test can be measured by
content or by correlation with a criterion that we know is valid. The
concept of the test validity affects all aspects of the test design,
irrespective of the prevailing linguistic paradigm.
a- Construct Validity:
It is the answer to the question, to what extent the test copes with
the theories of the language acquisition. The more the test is based on the
language acquisition theories, the more valid the test is. Brown ( 1984)
points out that if there is a good match between the components of a
speaking test, for instance, and the theoretical constructs of oral
communicative competence, we can say that the test has construct validity.
Cronbach (1982, p. 153) states " Every time an educator asks about what
the instrument really measures, he is calling for information on construct
129
validity. To Weir ( 1987), construct validity is the most important kind of
validity as it embraces all other forms of validity.
Weir (1987) also points out that in the past, little attention has been
accorded to the non- statistical aspects of construct validity. In the earlier
psychometric- structuralism approach to language testing, the prevailing
theoretical paradigm lent itself easily to testing discrete elements of the
target language and little need was seen for much a prior deliberation on
the match between theory and test. Additionally, the empiricism and
operationalism of those working, in educational measurement, made the
idea of working with non- objective criteria unattractive.
130
Construct validity refers specifically to basing a language test on
certain assumptions of a language theory about that language behavior
tested or measured. Kelly(l 974) stresses the point that,
b-Content Validity:
13 1
representation of the test traits to the content taught in the EFL program
indicates to its content validity. Yet, Moller states,
" ... The distinction between construct and content validity 111
language testing is not always very marked, particularly for
tests of general language proficiency." (1982b, p. 68).
132
To decide if the test has this kind of content validity, there should be
a careful analysis of the language being tested and the particular course
taught. Heaton (1975) thinks that the test should be so constructed as to
contain a representative sample of the course, and the relationship
between the course and the test should be apparent.
c- Face Validity:
This refers to the judgment of the observers about what the test
appears to measure. Face validity pertains to whether the test looks valid
to the examinees who take it; the administrative personnel who decide its
use and other technically untrained observers. Fundamentally, the
question of face validity concerns rapport and public relations." (Anastasi.,
1966, p. 136).
133
Yet, the value of the face validity has been discounted by Lado
(1964 ); Davies (1988); Ingram (1984 ); Palmer (1981) and Bachman et al
(1986). Bachman et all, for example, thinks that since there is no generally
accepted procedure for determining whether or not a test demonstrate this
characteristic, and since it is not an acceptable basis for imperative
inferences from the test scores, it has no place in the discussion of test
validity.
d- Washback validity:
This refers to the fact that achievement tests should reflect, the
teaching process that precedes them. Weir (1987); Porter (1983) and
Morrow ( 1986) have referred to the effect of a test on teaching. If a test
has good backwash effects, it will exert a good influence on the learning
and teaching that takes place before the test. The term backwash,
according to Heaton (1975) refers to the effects of the language test on the
language teaching process and program.
Tests are to reflect what teachers, likely, try to equip the student
with, i.e., the skills within a communicative framework. The items and
formats should reflect the instruction, given in the EFL class. They should
be representative of the language skills or sub-skills, included in the
syllabus, used in the EFL program. They should be closely related to the
teaching and learning process that precedes taking the test or the test
operation.
134
e. Criterion Related Validity:
Yet, Weir (1987) points out that there is a distinct danger that one
might be forced to place one' s faith in a criterion measure that may in
itself not be a valid measure of the construct in question. He argues that
135
one can not claim that a test has a criterion-related validity because it
correlates highly with another test, if the other test itself does not measure
the criterion in question.
Madsen (1983) points out that a reliable test is one that produces
essentially the same results, consistently on different occasions when the
conditions of the test remain the same. Weir (1978) thinks this is a
fundamental criterion against which any language test has to be judged.
Thus, reliability refers to a test' s ability to yield consistent results, at
different times, m different situations.
136
b- The consistency of the scoring:
LadO (1964), thinks a test is reliable if the scores obtained with it are
steady. Yet, for scores obtained from any test to be steady, there should be
some kind of criteria for the test markers to base their evaluation and
grading on. Weir says,
137
as .00. A reliability coefficient of .70 might be satisfactorily for a speaking
testy while a full-length paper and pencil test of vocabulary might be
expected to show a reliability coefficient of. 98 or .99.
Yet for practical reasons, the split half method has been used to
check the reliability of the tests included in this study and this formula has
been used
N m ( N - m ))
rll = (l- NX2
N -1
s.d. = '1 ·~ ~
d
" Reliability is the first essential for any test; but for certain
kinds of language tests may be very difficult to achieve."(1988,
p. 14)
138
degree of reliability, in order to enhance validity. Yet, a test can only be
valid if it is also reliable. However, the two concepts are, in certain
circumstances, mutually exclusive, but if a choice has to be made, validity
after all, is the most important. Weir (1987 ,p. 35) states that,
139
Moller (1982) adopts a similar approach when he claims that
although reliability is something, we should always try to achieve in our
tests, it may not be always the prime consideration. He mentions that tests
of communicative use, may quite properly exhibit lower reliability without
adversely affecting the overall validity of the test.
140
Chapter.4
Analysis and Evaluation
For the purposes of the present study, both the assessment
process, and the secondary school certificate English exams, have
been subjected to a complete analysis and evaluation, on the basis of
the criteria, set in chapter.3. The objective, behind this, is just to
reveal points of strength and weakness in the assessment process
and its main tool, and to suggest the right interventions.
Yet, being achievement tests does not undermine the fact that
these tests can be used as proficiency or aptitude tests. The
assumption, according to Madsen (1983). is that the three language
learning variables (i.e. achievement, performance and aptitude)
correlate positively with each other. But, because of the
surroundings of these exams and their operation, measuring the
students' proficiency or aptitude, in EFL skills, is often a subordinate
secondary function. The reason is that neither the proficiency tests
nor the aptitude tests are based on the content of a syllabus taught.
They are not administered at the end of the teaching program
either. An achievement test, according to Lado (1964) and Heaton
(1975) can be used for measuring of the testee' s proficiency and
aptitude because of the correlation among the three language
variables.
14 1
Moreover, using the general secondary school certificate
English exams for the purpose of classifying and the selecting
students, passing these exams, for further training or higher
education, is not against the fact that these exams are mainly
achievement tests. The reason is that, the student' s performance, on
an achievement test can be an indicator of his or her performance rn
a certain subject area or training because the student' s value in an
achievement test, can be, in case of valid tests, a prediction of his or
her performance in a further study. Yet, basing these exams on the
syllabus, taught in the final phase of the general secondary school
and administering them at the end of the syllabus, taught, indicate
the achievement structure of these exams.
142
reading formats (i.e. the novel for the art student and study for the
science and math students) can be direct measures for evaluating the
student' s language literacy skills.
1. a. Writing:
143
dominant approach used, specifically, rn these exams is the latter, i.e.,
the direct one.
Table no. 1 shows the change has been made in this respect:
The testee is usually asked to write some lines (on a given topic
or subject ) in a form of a paragraph. Guiding ideas are given to the
testee to guide student in the writing process . Also, the testee can
144
expand these guiding ideas to develop or organize his or her
paragraph in an effective way. The guiding ideas are given in a form
of written phrases so that the testee can center his or her writing
around them.
No Year Paragraph
1 1989 Write a paragraph of about five lines on the
following ...
(expanding the ideas, given)
2 1990 Write a paragraph of five lines on .... expanding the
ideas given
3 1991 Write a paragraph of eight lines on ... covering the
ideas given
4 1992 Write a paragraph of not less than 10 lines on:
(some ideas suggested for the testee)
5 1993 Write a paragraph of not less than 10 lines on .....
(Some ideas are suggested for guiding the testee' s
writing)
Table no. 3 shows the topics used for the writing tasks in the
last five years:
145
The length of the paragraph designed, ranges from five to ten
lines. Before 1990, testee used to be asked to write about five lines;
then, in 1991, lines required mounted to eight lines. Since 1992,
testee has had to write ten lines on the given topic. Yet, it is up to
student to decide the number of words and the styles in his/her
writing and the way, he or she develops the writing act.
Table no. 4 shows the lengths required in the last five years:
No Year Length
1 1989 5
2 1990 5
3 1991 8
4 1992 10
5 1993 10
b. Letter Writing:
The purposes, for writing letters in the two cases (i.e. initiation
or reply), are assumed to appeal to the testees' interests.
Congratulations, apologies, invitations, giving advice or asking
someone for advice or inquiring about something, etc., are among the
topics, used in this respect.
146
student is directly asked to write a paragraph of a certain number of
lines on a certain subject, using the ideas given, as a kind of guide in
this process, there is no specific obligatory number of lines for the
student to write.
Table no. 5 shows the purposes and the test formats, used for
letter writing tasks in the last five years.
2. a. Functions
The two approaches, used, are the dialogue format and the
situation or the mini- dialogues ones. In both cases, testee has to
147
respond to the situation writing the deleted parts of the dialogue or
mini-dialogue (depending on his/her competence in EFL) in a
communicative way. There are about six deleted parts in the
dialogue and four deleted parts in the mini-dialogue for the testee to
fill.
b. Function A pp roaches:
a- Dialogues:
The topics, used for the dialogue tasks, are assumed to put the
student in life like situations, where he/she can use the language
communicatively, i.e. sending or receiving a message. Sometimes, the
dialogue centers around a shopping experience or any everyday life
situation like talking about one' s favorite hobby or favorite radio or
TV program.
148
The functions, required for completing the deleted parts of the
dialogue, are those needed by the student to express him/herself in
life situations in the target language. Measuring the testee' s skill in
using the target language functionally is the focus on these formats.
For example, making requests, or inquiries about someone or
something or showing expression of agreement or disagreement or
stating the likes and the dislikes, are among the functions focused on,
on these exams.
Table no. 6 shows the topics and the functions used in the
dialogue approach, in the last five years.
149
Table .6 (Cont.)
5 1993 - Booking a room 1-(A): inquiry about the duration
in a hotel stay
2-(A): inquiry about the kind of
the room
3-(A): asking for personnel
information
4- (B): inquiry about the price
5-(B): inquiry about the inclusion
of everything in the price
6-(B): inquiry about the location
of the hotel
b. Mini- dialogues:
Like the dialogues approach, the student has to use the target
language to express himself or herself in a communicative way. He
or she is asked to use the target language for purposes or functions
such as, offering or making requests , apologizing or showing a
surprise, making invitations, refusing politely , asking for
forgiveness, etc.
Table no. 7 shows the functions required m the last five years.
150
Table . 7 (Cont.)
2 1990 Situations - suggestion
- an excuse
- a polite refusal
- an agreement
3 1991 Mini- dialogue - offering help
- suggestion
- apologize
- forgiveness
4 1992 Mini- dialogue - polite refusal
- asking for direction
- polite request
- agreement
5 1993 Mini- dialogue - polite refusal
- request
- congratulation
- thanking someone
Table no. 8 shows the test formats, used in the last five years
in the Secondary Certificate English Exam, for assessing the student' s
performance in both the dialogue and the mini- dialogue approach
I5I
Table no. 8 (Cont.)
3 1991 a- Write the m1ssmg parts in the given dialogue: 6
b- Complete the following short dialogues: 4
4 1992 a- Write the missing parts in the given dialogue: 6
b- Complete the given mini- dialogue 4
5 1993 a- write the missing part in the given dialogue: 6
b- Complete the mini- dialogues given 4
152
Table no. 9 shows the topics of the comprehension passages in
the last five years exams and the number of the questions used.
153
3.c Reading Comprehension Assessment Formats:
Table no. 11 shows the formats used for assessing the student'
s reading comprehension and the type of the questions, used in this
respect:
154
languages. For the student to translate from the target language into
the native language, he/she must be aware of the points of
differences in the structure, in addition to the lexical items of the two
languages. Consequently, the student encounters the points of
conflict that can arise from the overlap between the two languages.
Table no. 13 shows the topics, and the length of the passages
to be translated from English to Arabic and vice versa in the last five
years in the Secondary School Certificate English Exams, in the last
five years.
156
Table no. 13 (Cont.)
3 1991 a- Education a- English 5 35
b- Wars b- Arabic 1 8
c- Natural resources c- Arabic 1. 5 14
4 1992 a- Childhood a- English 4 30
b- Planning b- Arabic 1.5 15
5 1993 a-Food a- English 4 30
b-The cultural b- Arabic 2 16
movement in Egypt
5. a. Extensive Reading:
The "Novel" for art students and "Study for science" for the
math and science students are used for developing the student' s
skill in using the target language to develop his or her academic
competence. The emphasis in both teaching the novel and study for
science, is on developing the student' s skill in using the language as
a means to get information. Consequently, the test items for both of
them are supposed to measure the testee' s skill in getting the
content read. The interest of the tests formats, devoted to this
purpose, is in measuring the content, the student has gotten from
syllabus taught.
157
open-ended questions and the completion questions formats. The
latter format has been changed into the 'Comment on' format since
1992. In both formats, the student has to use the content, he or she
has gotten from the extensive reading texts to answer the questions
included.
1. Open-ended questions:
3. Comment on:
158
b- Study For Science:
I. Multiple Choice:
2. Completion:
159
Table no. 13 shows the test formats, and the number of the
questions, used for the extensive reading in the last five years.
160
a. Lexical and Structural Approaches
16 1
Table no. 12 shows the formats, used for assessing the
student's competence, in both the lexical items and the grammatical
items in the last five years in the Secondary Certificate School Exams.
162
b. Lexical and Structural Assessment Formats:
2. Completion items:
163
a. Cloze Passages:
The deletion of some words of the passage, set for this purpose,
follows certain rules so that the general meaning of the passage can
be grasped by the student. In most cases the first two or three
sentences remain without deletion to help the student in this process.
The Cloze format is quite different from the "Insert Format", as in the
former the student uses his or her comprehension of the whole
passage, while in the latter, the testee is just asked to comprehend
the isolated sentence.
b. Do as shown formats:
164
the sentence structure. A third type is the completion type, in which
the student is asked to complete a sentence using a certain structure.
Besides, in some cases, the student is asked to insert the right
preposition, if there is a filling format type used there.
165
C. Marking the student' s answers:
166
No attention is paid to the total meaning of student' s performance
while marking his/her answer sheet. Thus, student' s communicative
competence is ignored.
167
Table no.14 (Cont.)
3 1991 I -Writing I0 I0
2- Spoken English 10 7
3- Translation 5 5
4- Reading Comprehension 14 I0
5- Vocabulary & Structure 29 I9
6- Novel/ 8 8
Study I2 8
4 1992 I-Writing 10 5
2- Spoken English 10 7
3- Translation 5 5
4- Reading Comprehension 10 10
5- Vocabulary & Structure 25 17
6- Novel/ 4 8
Study 12 8
5 1993 I-Writing 10 5
2- Spoken English 10 7
3- Translation 5 3
4- Reading Comprehension 10 10
5- Vocabulary & Structure 25 I5
6- Novel/ 6 10
Study I5 10
168
the EFL program. The only and the basic function of these exams is to
sort out the students and classify them for the purpose of further
educational programs.
169
4.b. 2 Evaluation:
170
There is, also, a gap between what occurs, in the teaching
process and in the assessment process. The teaching activities used 111
the EFL teaching class are excluded, from the assessment process,
while the syllabus, taught, is the only focus. In the classroom,
students are asked to participate in classroom activities and doing
some tasks, doing homework and journals, yet, in the assessment
process, the content taught is assumed to be the main basis of the
assessment process.
17 1
The over reliance on the secondary school education certificate
English exam, in evaluating the student' s language competence, has
led to malfunctioning learning practices. Students, for example, do
not care about the other teaching activities, in spite of their
importance, in the foreign language acquisition process. Students
have devalued these activities, because they do not count on the
exams. Thus, the exam content has become the criterion for
deciding what it is important to learn in EFL programs.
172
passive behaviors of the students in class. They often draw the
attention of the students to the importance of their participation, m
the EFL activities, to their foreign language acquisition process. Yet,
students assume that the only indicator of any teaching activity is
how directly it is related to the EFL final exams. Thus, the complaints
about students' passive behaviors in the EFL class, are expected to
continue.
173
because of this psychological problem. Though they study the
content taught, hard for the exam, they fail passing it. They can be
the victims of our assessment process.
174
and grammar are not assessed though they make an impact on the
student' s learning process.
175
EFL programs ignores the potential of the role of the teacher in the
assessment process.
176
Administering the exam at the end of the school program does
not give the chance to reveal the students' strengths and use these
strengths for motivating student to learn more. The student does not
have the motivation, in the EFL program, to be more involved in the
teaching process. Student has to wait till the end of the EFL program
and the administration of the assessment process to learn his/her
strengths. Yet, if the assessment process is continuous with the EFL
program, student will be motivated throughout the teaching process
to do better. Consequently, the feedback, that is necessary for
effective language learning, is not found in our EFL programs.
177
student' s language literacy skills either directly or indirectly. Even,
the formats devoted to measuring student' s competence in using the
target language functions are actually reading and writing formats.
Student' s writing skill is assumed to have its impact on all the
student' s performance even in the function formats that are
claimed to measure student' s speaking skill. Thus, reading and
writing skills, are emphasized at the expense of the oral skills.
178
has to depend on his reading and wntrng skills rather than on
his/her listening comprehension or speaking skills.
179
writer to be a good reader exactly as a good speaker should be a
good listener. Thus, we may have good readers and good writers , rn
EFL classes, but we may, also, have bad listener and bad speakers.
Consequently, the interest of the present assessment process in the
literacy skills leads to developing these skills while neglecting the
oral ones.
180
Eight: The assessment process, represented in the exams
used in our program, does not honor the wholeness of the
language or the integration of the language items.
I81
approach, rather than the holistic approach, where the impression
and the whole meaning of what the student expresses is focal point,
is the dominant one in the scoring process. Even in evaluating the
student' s performance in the integrated formats such as reading,
writing and translation, the mark awarded is distributed to bits of
grammar and spelling.
182
aside in spite of their importance to the student' s language reading
process.
183
Writing is, also a teacher centered in our assessment process.
The student has to write on a topic that is not of his or her choice and
the teacher is the only audience for the student. The only sign of the
teacher' s reaction to the student' s writing is the grade he or she
awards the testee.
Also, student may not have the basic information about the
issue discussed even in his or her native language. For some social or
financial reasons, the student may not have the experience
encountered on the exam formats. Student may be asked to write
about summer resorts, for example, that he/she has never been to
before. Student may be asked on the exam format to give a tourist
some direction about a place he/she has never heard of before.
184
The assessment process is not sensitive in its tests to the
students' social background that can be a determiner to his or her
understanding. All the students, all over Egypt, have the same exam
questions regardless of the geographical and social differences.
Student' s different cultural background is not put into consideration.
The context, presented in these exams, is not related properly, to the
students' different cultural backgrounds. The context, used for the
students of Alexandria, for example, is the same as that presented to
the students of Aswan. Thus, for some students these contexts lack
the meaning and the purpose.
Excluding the student' s real life either in the EFL class or his or
her house, causes a great difficulty for the student to understand the
context in which the language test item is presented. It becomes
more demanding for the student to get the test item. Consequently,
the student needs clarification to explicit the message presented,
otherwise, he or she can not do well on the test.
185
Twelve: The assessment process lacks equitability:
l 86
Also, because the secondary school certificate English exam is
limited to just one setting, it lacks the right equability. The student
may be susceptible to some casual circumstances that may affect his
or her performance badly on these times. So, it is fair for the student,
if the assessment process is continuous as his evaluation is not
limited to the risk of a single time.
187
Since theses exams are summative, they can not indicate what
the student has/ not achieved from the subject taught. The EFL
teacher can not use the student' s points of strengths as a scaffolding
for what is going to be taught in the EFL program. Because of the
exclusion of what the student has already learned from the syllabus,
taught, these exams may not give the student the sense of
achievement that may correlate positively with his or her language
learning process ..
18 8
one on the exams or tests used in the assessment process. It is not
communicative in its nature. Reading and writing are viewed as final
products rather than processes.
189
B. The General Secondary School Certificate Evaluation:
The high cost of the test administration and the scoring of the
student' s answer sheets indicate that these tests are not practical
enough. A special budget is needed for the cost of preparing the
printed exam papers, and the students' answer sheets as well as the
fees for the teachers and the people in charge of administering and
scoring the test.
190
Table no. 16 shows the index of discrimination and the level of
difficulty in these tests in the last five years:
19 1
Table no. 17 shows the percentage of the items based on the
EFL program, in the last five years:
The items based on the syllabus taught in the third year and
the extensive reading part together are about 25% to 30%.
Consequently, these exams include about 70% to 75% of the items
that are not included in the syllabus. They are unseen parts to the
students. They include, the writing questions, the reading
comprehension passages and the translation passages.
192
Three: The tests, included in the study. have the adequate
reliability:
The split half method, used to check the reliability of the tests
included in the study, reveals that they may have the adequate
reliability. The values of the reliability, in the five cases, range from.
5 to .8 . The general secondary school exam, in 1992 gets the highest
reliability value while the 1989 gets the lowest value.
No Year R. Value
1 1989 .8
2 1990 .5
3 1991 .5
4 1992 .8
5 1993 .7
193
Also, no pilot administration is done. Exams are not subjected to any
evaluation either before or after test administration.
These exams are looked upon as top secret for many reasons
that can be put into consideration. Yet, the need for secrecy of these
exams does not negate the importance of subjecting them to a
thorough evaluation both before and after test administration. Also,
there can be many samples of these tests that can be discussed in
seminars in the educational centers and schools of education. Secrecy
of these tests, can be maintained by having many parallel items.
Those planned for the test, can be kept closed until their release on
the examination day.
194
Chapter .5
LS.Findings:
5.2. Conclusions:
The assessment process, in our EFL program, does not meet the
criteria, presented in chapter.3. It lacks the continuity, the variety of
assessment tools, the authenticity, the equitability, the appropriate
culture, required for effective tests. Also, there is a separation
between the assessment process and the teaching process in our EFL
programs. It is of no help to the EFL program used in the third year
certificate.
195
Moreover, the exams used, are limited to the written aspect of
the language communication and measuring the student' s oral skills
is neglected. Perhaps, the concept of the integration of the language
elements and sub-skills is confused to some extent to those who are
in charge of designing these exams in our EFL teaching programs in
our educational system.
The present assessment process is, also, of no value for the EFL
teaching process. The interest in these exams in comparing the
students with each other for the purpose of classifying and selecting
them for higher education. Thus, we can state that the general
secondary school certificate English exams are norm-referenced that
it is of a limited function in increasing the effectiveness of the
teaching process. The tests, required, for helping the teaching
process to do well is the criterion reference one where the interest is
in how much the student has achieved from the syllabus taught.
196
On the other hand, the English exams, the only tool, used in this
respect, in the assessment process, are not properly effective for
measuring the student' s language competence. They do not have the
adequate validity required in language tests.. They do not represent
the content of the syllabus they are supposed to be based on. They
have the reliability required just because they are performance and
aptitude tests rather achievement ones.
These exams have proved that they are not efficient properly.
The operation of these exams and marking students' answer sheets
cost a lot of time, money and effort so they are not practical enough
to use during the EFL teaching process. They are also too difficult if
they are viewed from achievement perspective. They have a high
index of discrimination just because they are performance and
aptitude tests rather than achievement ones.
197
communicative perspective. It should focus on both the oral and the
written aspect of the communication process. It should use proper
and effective tests.
A. What is a portfolio?
198
portfolio is a revealing collection of a student' s work, which a
teacher or a student can judge to be important evidence of the
student' s learning Navarrete et al (1990).think that this method is
rapidly gaining in popularity because of its ability to assess a student
work samples over the course of a school year or even longer Averill
(1994, p. 3) states that in language assessment, this approach is
becoming more prevalent as we move toward integrated skills and
teaching language in context. Galvan (1994) states that the fallouts
of depending on the standardized tests or the national tests, in the
assessment process, have aroused the interest in thinking of using
the portfolio as the alternative assessment approach.
199
accomplishments, official records, diary and samples of the student' s
writings.
200
procedures be developed for aggregating the diverse information
provided by informal assessment into meaningful set of indices that
allow us to state whether or not our programs are effective? Also, if
EFL teacher uses the above mentioned techniques, these information
can be used for such purpose.
201
The total evaluation of the student' s language competence will
not be limited to one assessment tool or activity, but rather it will be
based on the student' s performance in these activities altogether.
The grade of performance, set for the evaluation of the student' s
language competence, can be distributed among the different
assessment activities, so that the student' s involvement in any
teaching activity can count for evaluating his/her language
competencies according to the following suggested model..
202
importance of each component included in the assessment process.
The main greater part of the total mark, for example, is devoted to
the national tests because of its importance mentioned in chapter 3.
(See chapter. 3 pp from to for more details about the
importance of each activity included in the portfolio model.
C. Portfolio Requirements:
a. Teacher' s Observation:
203
the teacher with much valuable data concerning the student' s
language competence.
204
Teacher' s Evaluation Scale:
b- Event recording:
205
- The teacher has, also, to focus on both the positive and the negative
behaviors.
The EFL teacher should use the right checklist that can help
him or her evaluate the student' s language skills and sub-skills.
Thus, there can be different checklists for assessing different skills
(e.g. listening, speaking, reading and writing)
b. Teacher' s Checklist:
The EFL teachers can use checklists, planned for this purpose,
with numbers from 1 to 4 indicating to the frequency occurrence of
the learning problem or problems, i.e. l = never 2= sometimes 3=
usually 4= always. The frequency occurrence of a certain learning
problem in the language teaching or testing situation can be can be
simply calculated in the number of the times, it emerges in the
student' s language performance.
206
Listed below, are the different checklists that can be used for the
different language skills by the EFL teacher in the portfolio
assessment process.
207
2. The Speaking Checklist Model,:
208
3. Reading Checklist Model:
209
4.Writing Skill Checklist Model:
210
Writing Checklist (Cont.)
3 Content:
- includes content appropriate to the (1) (2) (3) (4)
prompt
- provides appropriate sequences (1) (2) (3) (4)
- build unity in his composition (1) (2) (3) (4)
- provides language beyond the model (1) (2) (3) (4)
- uses sentences appropriate to the (1) (2) (3) (4)
prompt
- uses drafts to improve quality (1) (2) (3) (4)
-They can involve both the formal and informal assessment methods.
- It will put an end to the bad learning practices we have in our EFL
classes, e.g., the student' s passive behaviors in the class, the noise
and the troubles student make in the EFL classes.
21I
- They document the student' s learning and progress; and help
teachers examine their own development and skills.
Thus, the value of the portfolio lies in three areas. In the first
area, portfolios have the potential to provide the teacher and the
student with a rich source of information to understand the
development and the progress of the student and to plan the
educational programs that enhance student learning and " show case"
their achievement. In the second area, portfolios allow for reporting
in a holistic and valid way. The information, gathered in a portfolio,
is taken from actual student work and assessment focuses on the
whole of what the student learns, not on discrete and isolated facts
and figures. In the third area, formal and informal data can be used
to evaluate student learning in a comprehensive and authentic
manner.
3. It will include all the four language skills and sub-skills. Some
activities can be suggested for the oral skills, while others can cover
the literacy skills. Video tapes and cassette recorders will find the
place in our teaching process. The student will find developing
his/her oral skills can count for the evaluation of his oral; skills as
212
well as the written skills. Thus, the four skills can have the equal
emphasis in both the teaching process and the assessment process.
213
information pertains to program goals and related objectives.
Informal data can answer questions such as: What skills did the
student actually learn during the academic year? To what extent did
students have the opportunity to acquire the particular skills or
concepts? What progress did the students make over a year? How
did student's attitude affect learning?
1- a clear purpose
214
Content validity can be maximized by making sure that portfolios
contain the following:
a- a clear purpose of assessment,
b- a close link between the behaviors or the products collected and
the evaluation goals,
c- a wide variety of the classroom exercises or tasks measuring the
same skills and
d- a cross- check of student capabilities based on both formal tests
and informal assessments.
215
- Ensure inter-ratter reliability when more than one person is
involved in the scoring process.
- Allow time to test the observation instrument and its ability to pick
up the information desired.
216
F. The student' s final evaluation:
At the end of the EFL teaching program and for the purpose
of the selection and the classification of the student, the final
evaluation of the student has to be calculated in terms of scores and
grades, it can be the mean of the student' s scores in every
assessment tool used in the different times he/she has been
evaluated . Then, the mean of the student' s score is added up to
his/her score in the national test. The teacher will find it necessary
to go through the student' s different components of the portfolio to
evaluate the student' s language competencies.
217
administered in the faculty he/she is planning to join should be
another criteria.
218
Recommendations:
9- The tests and exams, used in the assessment process, should have
the right efficiency as assessment tools. They should be practical,
valid and reliable.
219
11- In the assessment process, in our EFL program, there should be
more interest in the meaning of the message conveyed by the
student more than the discrete points.
14- New test formats should be used in the present exams and tests.
Dictation, cloze passages, retelling , summary formats should be tried
and used if they prove effective in our EFL programs. Student has to
be given the chance to show his/her reaction to what he/she is
reading or asked to write on.
15- We should give due care to the test formats that encourages the
student to use the language as a means to get the content or the
information (i.e. the "Novel" for the art section and the "Study" for
the science sections). The assumption is that the academic
competence makes communicative competence.
General Recommendations:
220
2- We have to give faculties and the centers of education, the due
care in managing our education. Professors of education should be
consulted before making any decision in our educational system.
3- We have to trust the teacher, in both the teaching process and the
assessment process.
6- The EFL teachers should have their role in selecting the syllabus,
taught, in our EFL program.
Suggested Proposals:
221
- The relationship between the continuation of the assessment
process and the student' s learning gains in the EFL programs.
- The use of the letter writing approach for teaching and assessing
grammar and vocabulary.
- The factors that can bear on developing and assessing the student' s
reading skill in EFL.
- Using the dialogue approach for developing the student' s oral skills
and assessing them.
222
- Using the translation passage as a technique for developing the
student' s writing and assessing it.
-Using tapes and videos for developing and assessing the student' s
language competencies in ERFL.
223
Tables and Appendices
Questionnaire No. 1
224
Questionnaire Criteria (Cont.)
9 Evaluating the student' s reading skill (no) (sometimes) (often)
should concentrate on the reading (usually) (always)
process.
1 0 Evaluating the student' s writing skill (no) (sometimes) (often)
should be a process oriented. ((usually) (always)
1 1 The assessment process should be (no) (sometimes) (often)
culturally, and developmentally (usually) (always)
appropriate
1 2 The assessment process must be (no) (sometimes) (often)
authentic and equitable ( (usually) (always)
1 3 Norm referenced tests are of no use to (no) (sometimes) (often)
the EFL teaching program. (usually) (always)
225
Questionnaire No. 2
226
Questionnaire. 3
Dear ESL I EFL professor,
I have been doing a study, that suggests using the portfolio
assessment approach, in our educational system. Responding to the
questionnaire question, can be helpful to the present study.
Question
What assessment tools, do you think, can be included in the portfolio
suggested so as to be efficient as an assessment approach?
227
Table No. 19 Shows the linguistic analysis of Excel Book.1 including:
a- the grammatical items. and b- the lexical items.
228
Table no. 19 (Cont.)
16 16 47-48 a-purpose clause/ phrase
b-words that are never plural like baggage,
Luggage, furniture, macaroni/news and etc.
17 17 5 0-51 a-talking about the future
b-quite/ quiet
18 I8 5 3-54 a-the simple past tense
b-remind/ remember
I9 I9 56-57 a-the present perfect tense
b-do/ make
20 20 59-60 a-used to structure
b-country /the coun try-i ourney I travel
229
Table No. (20) shows the linguistic analysis of Excel Book 2. including
bh · 1 ·items. an db - t h
ot · a- t he Q:rammatica e l ex1cal 'items:
No. Unit Lesson Linguistic Items
1 1 2-3 a-the passive with, be and get
b- marry/get married/married
2 2 5-6 a-quantity
b-souvenir/ memory/ street/ road
3 3 8-9 a-How/ What + Adjective Questions
-ly adverbs in place of very
b-its/ it's=it is/ it's it has
4 4 11 -12 a-phrasal verbs
b-laugh/ laugh at ,-wait for/ expect
5 5 14- I 5 a-lack of necessity
b-by I on + cases with means of transport.
6 6 17 - I 8 a-the passive with the modal verbs
b- agree/ accept,- bring up/educate,
routine/ red tape
7 7 20-21 a-if + were( type 2 conditional
b- ' s function in replacing places, shops, etc.
8 8 23-24 a-reported questions
b- use/ be used to/ used to
9 9 26-27 a-verbs+ prepositions + Gerund
b- give/ find with direct and indirect objects
10 10 29-30 a-gerund after some verbs gerund
b-try+infinitive and try +d
1I 1I 3 2-3 2 a-ed/ ing adjectives
b-after/ afterwards/ after that
12 12 3 5-3 6 a- like/ love/ prefer and feeling verbs
b-taste/ tasteful - words with or without
'
apostrophe' s
13 13 3 8-3 9 a- the simple past tense
b-hard/ late/ fast - hardly/ lately
I4 I4 41-42 a- the present perfect continuous
I the simple present tense
b-expressions with take/ have/ give
15 I5 44-45 a-the past perfect tense
b-a lot of/ not much/ not many
I6 16 47-48 a- passive and causative cases
b-if/ where/whenever I when possible
- if/ where/ when/ whenever necessary
230
Table no. 20 (Cont.)
17 17 5 0-51 a- requests with partitives
b-else/ other/ next
18 18 5 3-54 a- patterns with too and enough
b-complete/ fill
19 19 56-57 a-phrasal verbs types 2/ 3
b- think of/ about
20 2o 59-60 a- lack of necessity in the past
b- drop/ drop someone off/ drop off/drop in
231
Table No. (21) shows the linguistic analysis of Excel Book 3 including:
a- the grammatical items, b- the lexical items.
232
Table no. 21 (Cont.)
I7 I7 5 0-51 a- I wish/ If only
b- listen/ hear
I8 18 53-54 a-reported question
b- salary/ wage- reason/ cause
I9 I9 5 6-57 a- verbs/ adjectives + prepositions gerunds
b-shy/ ashamed- lonely/ alone
20 20 5 9-60 a-verbs + gerunds
b-sense verbs + adjectives
233
Table. No.22 Shows the language notes included m Excel Book . 1
234
Table no. 22 (Cont.)
13 13 37 acting as/ the spoken word/ interview/
interpret/ made con tri bu ti on s/ the old;d and
the new/ he enjoys a game/ work hard and
play hard/
14 14 40 expressing himself/ skilled/ well/ sure
about/ most of us/ figures/ job, work/ some
others/ very few people/ without working/
15 15 43 renting a flat/ landlord/ moved in/ a room/
shelves/ put some up for you/ more light/
another light/No problem/ it is coming from
this pipe/on time/ agree with/ at once/
16 16 46 a room of your own/ house/ why? Because/
match/ move the furniture round/ space/ an
endless business/ surroundings/ can afford
to/ make a small corner/ recognize as/
17 17 49 quite/ quite/ book/ per night/ continental
breakfast/ I like a big steak for breakfast/
arrange/
18 18 52 witness/ the wild;d west/ hold-up/ bank
robber/ bank clerk/ draw a gun/
19 19 55 wish you were here/ we've been having a
wonderful time/ sight-seeing/ souvenirs/
the great mosque of ... /how we wish you
were here!
20 20 58 things/ how the world has changed/ three
miles each way/ all these cars and buses/
serious/ by sea/ a journey/ on the way/ you
just get into a plane/ another country/ the
feeling/ isn't it amazing!
235
T a bl e no. 23 s hows t h e Ianguage notes me ldd. u e m E xce lB 00 k2.
No Unit Lesson Language Notes
1 1 1 great/ event/ birth/ marriage/ death/
human life/ marked/ we are born/
whether. ... or not/ marry/ on behalf of/ the
young couple/
2 2 4 what about. . ./ three will be enough/
material/ how much/ spend the afternoon/
view I
3 3 7 The U.S.A./ The U. S. S.R/ Brazil/
4 4 10 a few bits of/ make .... mad/lot of
opportunities/ making jokes
5 5 I 3 get back/ wave/ it's no good/ funny/ we'll
just have to walk/ meter/ saved our skins/
6 6 16 bring up/ young mothers/ young children/
freedom/ even/ a routine/ they must be put
to bed/ nursery school/
7 7 19 collect/ wife/ outside/ let me see/ if it
were/ florist' s/ thoughtful/
8 8 private life/Ii v es/ popular/ realize/ great/
poor/ so far/ remember/the goal/ match/
9 9 25 barber/ doorman/ usherette/ mechanic/
garage man/ car repair man/
I 0 I 0 28 fun/go swimming/ not far from here/ try/
used to skiing/ that sounds nice/ by eight o'
clock/
11 I I 3I seeing the sights/ a conducted tour/ how did
you find it? I impressive/ impressed/ after
that/ we left Athens/ It's such a beautiful
place/ spend the evening/
I 2 I2 34 just like mothers used to make it/ how do
you like ... ?I hate .. .love/ altogether/ some
people/ a bit of/ it's a;; a question of taste/
at least/ Japanese sukiyaki/ Russian borsch/
I 3 I 3 37 Dear Sirs:/ washing machine/ I have had
nothing but trouble/ delivered/ fell off/
clothes;others/ chase/ laundry room/ lately/
pools of water/
14 124 40 abroad/ qualified in/ making inquiries
about/ the British Council/post-graduate
studies/ work/ information/ leaflet/ medical
school/ learn/ take a test/ I hope not/
236
Table no. 23 (Cont.)
15 15 53 stop press/ road/ present/ arouse/ set up a
new world record/ non-stop/ had fallen
asleep/ clear/ winners/
16 16 56 service without smile/ service/ outside/ you
can have your clothes laundered/ your shoes
cleaned/ where possible/ automated/
installed/ clear/ go without/
17 17 59 come off/ thread/ department store/ do you
speak? I scissors/ sun-tan lotion/
18 18 52 to be missing/. figure
19 I9 55 seeing someone off/ the conference is over/
drop someone off/ scales/ hand-luggage/
cabin-luggage/ look after/ passenger
flying . ./ have a good trip/
20 20 58 thinking of other people/ hold the door
open/ offer/give up your seat/ form/stand
in a queue/
237
T a bl e no. 24 sh ows th e 1anguage no t es me ldd.
u e m E xce lB 00 k3 .
No. Unit Lesson Language Notes
1 1 1 walking down a street/ part ofI carriage/
seat/ you must be mistaken/ It can't be/
anyway/ noise/ up there/ some kind of
bird/ towards us/ Whew!/ an awful place/
2 2 4 see ourselves/ consider/ painter/ a
successful banker/ position/ in poverty/
3 3 7 what the papers say/ gave a concert/ have
you finished reading all those reviews? I just
about/ how are they? I recommend/ I hope I
shall/ friendly I
4 4 10 report/ term/ spring/ composition/ full of/
capable of doing better/ do better/ pay
attention to/ most of his time/ succeed in/
persist in/ doing experiments/ fair/ take
things more seriously/ form master/
5 5 13 pen- friend/ ' O' level/ I am learning to play
the guitar/ play the guitar/ photo/
6 6 16 I wouldn't be seen dead in it/ the next day/
wear/ the big fashion houses in London/
baggy/ hair ... jewelry/ even if .... / ignore/
7 7 19 return or single?/ we'd like two tickets/
we'd like to be in ... before .. ./ catch/ it arrives
at../ change/ we've just made it/
8 8 22 get in/ dressing table/ solve a crime/ clues/
look for/ used in/ witness/ thieve/ robbery I
detective
9 9 25 optical illusion/ appear/ steadily/ look to
the left/right/ prong/ figure/ which distance
is greater
10 10 28 hear from/ asleep/ at last/ I must tell
you ... /experience/ he was following me
round the shop/ crash/ the bottom of the
pile/
11 11 31 technological/ age/ possible/ there is no end
to/ gap/ between ... and ... / invented/ become
+ adjective/ available/ shorter and shorter/
the wheel/ as important as ever/ the past/
most inventions/ helped man to extend his
muscle power/
238
Table no.24 (Cont.)
12 12 34 tourist information/ I can even arrange a
tour/. by coach, or by taxi/ advice/ share a
taxi/ versus/
13 ]3 37 mad/ BrE/ It seemed that/ in a rage/ it
would not stop/ steaming with anger/ all
right/ madness
14 14 40 How do you buy the things you want? I
walk/ pick something out/ take it away/ a
tiring business/ shopping-guide/ TV's/
which one you would buy/ the more, the
better/
15 15 43 parking problems/traffic/you shouldn't have
done that/ so there is/ drive on/ No
entry/you ought not to have done that/
another/
16 l 6 46 tomorrow's world/ a serious business/
astrologers/ you look at what is happening/
take something like the motor-car/ ... will
have been replaced/ we can say/ cure/
pollution/a cure for cancer/ and so on/
17 l 7 49 I wish the weather were better/whether I
such conditions/ cheerful/ I'd rather listen/
fog is spreading from the east/ affect/ by
midnight/ heavy/ average for/
18 18 52 position/ block capitals/ type of business/
nature of work/ reason/ salary I languages/
command/ overseas travel/
19 19 55 alone/ strangers/ telling jokes/ outdoor
games/ you are very much an
introvert/extrovert/ shyness/ few things
worry you
20 20 58 an old friend/ a couple of hours/I
remember. .. writing to me/ I feel like
drinking something cool/ imagine see mg you
here/ I can't help remembering the old
days/ ... since we last met.
239
Table No. (25) shows the linguistic analysis of the General Secondary
School Certificate Endish Exammat10n. m 1989
No. The Linguistic Analysis Paper Part Question
1 a-grammatical points:
- verbs + gerunds 11 A 1
-past necessity 11 A 2
-the contrast clause 11 A 3
-past deduction 11 A 5
-off er 11 A 6
-present deduction 11 A 7
-prepositions 11 A 8
-prepositions 11 c 6
-past deduction 2 D 1
-the conditional statement: if+ 3 2 D 2
-the perfect future tense 2 D 3
-conjunctions 2 D 4
-indirect statement 2 D 6
-sO + aux. + sub structure 2 D 7
-wh questions 2 D 9
-question tag 2 D I0
-prepositions 2 111 1
-the present perfect tense 2 111 2
-prepositions 2 111 3
-modal + be + adj. 2 111 4
-verbs + that + statement 2 111 5
-indefinite articles 2 111 6
- superlative adjectives 2 111 7
-conj u nc ti on s 2 I 11 8
-object pronouns 2 1 1 1 9/10
2 b-lexical items:
-interesting/ interested/ being 2 A 4
interested 2 B 1/6
-raise/ arise- recommend/ advise-
heal/ cure- share/ divide-
weather/climate- life/ the life 2 c 1I 5
-fetch/bring-recognize/ know-
platform/ stop- parking/ entry-
delic i ou s/tas ty
-'only' lexical function
240
Table no. 25 (Cont.)
3 ~-lan2:1HU!f nQtf~ & functions
- giving information( A ) 1 B 11 1- 1
- inquiring ( B ) 1 B 1 11 -2
- inquiring ( A) 1 B 1 1 1 -3
- responding ( B ) 1 B 11 1 -4
- inquiring ( A ) 1 B 1 11 -5
- agreement ( B ) 1 B 111 -6
- advice 1 B IV- 1
-request 1 B IV- 2
-apology 1 B IV- 3
-polite refusal 1 B IV- 4
241
Table no. 26 shows the linPmst1c analvs1s of 1990 EnPlish Exam
No The Linguistic Analysis Paper Part Question
1 a-the grammatical points:
- tenses sequences 2 A I
- prepositions 2 A 3
- I wish structure 2 A 5
- past necessity 2 A 7
- the passive voice 2 D 1
- the conditional statement: if type 3 2 D 2
- indirect statement 2 D 4
- time conjunctions 2 D 5
- time conjunctions 2 D 6
- wh- question 2 D 7
- question tag 2 D 8
- joining sentences using relative pronouns 2 D 9
- time conjunctions 2 D 10
- subject pronouns 2 111 2/ 4/ 6
- object pronouns 2 1I I 8
- prepositions 2 111 9
2 b- the lexical items:
- thoughtful/ thoughtless/ thought 2 A 2
- polluted/ populated/ popular 2 A 4
- enjoyable/ enjoyed/ enjoying 2 A 6
- search for/ fetch/ watch 2 A 8
- life/ the life 2 B 1
- searched/ searched for 2 B 2
- between/ among 2 B 3
- heal/ cure 2 B 4
- pointed out/ pointed to/ pointed at 2 B 5
- cause/ reason 2 B 6
-very late/ too late 2 D 3
- use/ tell 2 111 1/ 3
- language/ others/ go 2 111 3/ 4/5/6
242
Table no. 26 (Cont.)
3 c- Language Functions:
- request ( A ) 1 B 111- 1
- explaining ( A ) 1 B 111- 2
- inquiring ( B ) 1 B 111- 3
- explaining ( A ) 1 B 111- 4
- inquiring ( B ) 1 B 111- 5
- responding ( B ) 1 B 111- 6
- making suggestions 1 B IV- a-1
- apologizing 1 B IV- a- 2
- polite refusal 1 B IV- a- 3
- agreement 1 B IV- a-4
243
Table no. 27 shows the linguistic analysis of the General Certificate
1991 En2:lish Exam
No Linguistic Analysis Paper Part Question
l a-grammatical items:
- quantity 2 l 1 A-1
- perfect future 2 1l A- 2
- If- type 3 conditional statement 2 1l A- 3
- preposition 2 11 A- 4
- tenses sequences 2 II1 l
- the past perfect and the past simple usage 2 11I 2
- indirect order/ advice 2 l I I 3
- type 3 conditional statement 2 111 4
- contrast phrase 2 l l l 5
- preposition 2 IV I
- contrast clause 2 IV 2
- the definite article 2 IV 3
- subject pronouns 2 IV 4
2 b- lexical items:
-forecast/ fore ground/ forecourt 2 I I A- 5
-matter/ condition/ situation 2 I l A- 6
- generous/ grateful/ kind 2 11 A- 7
- part/ percentage/ amount 2 I 1 A- 8
- anesthetics 2 1l B-1
- pollution 2 11 B- 2
- platform 2 1I B-3
- hold up 2 11 B- 4
- get 2 l 1 B- 5
- joining 2 l I B- 6
- cafe 2 I I C- l
- congratulate 2 I 1 C- 2
- worried 2 I I C- 3
- watching 2 I 1 C- 4
- ringing 2 I I C- 5
- raised 2 1I C- 6
244
Table no. 27 (Cont.)
3 ~- Lan211a2~ Functions:
- inquiry ( B ) 1 B 111- 1
- giving information ( B ) 1 B 11 1- 2
- reaction ( B ) 1 B 111- 3
- giving information ( B ) l B 111- 4
- additional information ( B ) 1 B 11 1- 5
- request ( A ) 1 B 111- 6
- offer I B IV- 1
- making suggestion I B IV- 2
- apology I B IV- 3
- forgiveness 1 B IV- 4
245
Table no. 28 shows the linguistic analysis of Certificate English Exam
in 1992
NO The Linguistic Analysis Paper Part Question
1 a- grammatical ooints:
- quantity 11 A-1 1
- lack of necessity 11 A-1 4
- result clause 11 A- l l 1
- uncountable nouns 11 A-1 13
- the conditional statement type.3 11 111 l
- result clause l 1 111 2
- wish structure 11 111 3
- passive statement 11 111 4
- passive statement 11 l 1I 5
- prepositions 11 11 2
- object pronouns 11 I 1 3
2 b- Lexical Items:
-memory I illusion/ impressions/ l l 1 2
imagination
- pay/ wage/ cash/ money 1l 1 3
- recalled/ remind/ remembered/ 11 1 5
recollected
-clever/ wise/ kind/ intelligent 11 1 6
- while/ since/ as soon as/until(lexical 11 1 7
function)
- suggest/ advise/ recommend/.tell 11 1 8
-look/ see/ observe/ novice 11 1 9
-by I as soon as/ until/ at 11 1 10
-forgotten/ forgetting/ forget/ forgetful 11 1 12
-impressed/ impressive/ impressionable/ 11 1 14
impressionistic
- rn case/ unless/ otherwise/ if 11 1 15
- chance/ fortune/ luck/ choice 11 1 16
- makes 11 11 1
- find 11 11 4
246
Table no 28 (Cont)
3 ~-lan2ua2~ functions:
- inquiry ( A ) 1 A-1 1
- inquiry ( A ) 1 A-1 2
- inquiry ( A ) 1 A-1 3
- inquiry ( A ) 1 A-1 4
- inquiry ( A ) 1 A-1 5
- inquiry ( A ) 1 A-1 6
- polite refusal 1 A- 2 1
- asking for direction I A- 2 2
- polite request 1 A- 2 3
- agreement I A- 2 4
247
Table No. 29 shows the linguistic analysis of the Certificate English
Exam, in 1993
No The Linguistic Analysis Paper Part Question
I a-grammatical points:
- the present perfect tense I A- 1 3
- tenses sequences 1 A- 1 6
- result clause I A- 1 8
- verbs followed by infinitive/ gerund 1 A- I 9
- negative result phrase 1 A- 1 I1
- obligation or necessity verbs 1 A- 1 13
- quantity I A- I l 4
- If only structure I A- l I 8
- the perfect future I A- I 1 9
- the perfect present tense I A- 2 1
- indirect statement I A- 2 2
- noun phrase 1 A- 2 3
- adjectival clause I A- 2 4
- the conditional statement type. 3 I A- 2 5
2 b- lexical items:
- arrive/ reach/ get/ go I l A- 1 l
- enjoy/ amuse/ entertain/ celebrate I 1 A- 1 2
- have gone/ have been to/ have arrived I1 A- I 5
- grow I get/ turn/ fall I I A- I 7
- make/ cause/ bring/ get 11 A- I I 0
- although/ despite/ because/ even for I 1 A- 1 I 5
lexical function
- accept/ allow I prevent/ forbidden 1I A- 1 1 6
- persuade/ request/ appeal/ demand 11 A- 2 l 7
3 c- language functions:
- inquiring ( A ) 1 A- 1 1
- inquiring ( A ) l A- I 2
- inquiring ( A ) l A- 1 3
- inquiring ( B ) 1 A- 1 4
- inquiring ( B ) 1 A- I 5
- inquiring ( B ) I A- 1 6
- polite refusal I A- 2 1
- requesting I A- 2 2
- congratulation I A- 3 3
- thanking I A- 4 4
- responding to an excuse I I A- 1 12
248
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